CinC likes to edit my posts. Here's the uncensored stuff:
The government has spent over a million dollars on
Allard. In
the lead-up to the February/March 2015 proceedings, the budget was
projected to be $431,590.00 What did that pay for? Lawyers, paralegals,
maybe flying in all those foreign witnesses* (which
Justice Phelan said had little weight in a constitutional case). You
would think with that kind of money they would have made a stronger case
than,
“fire, mold and organized crime.”
But perhaps there were ideological strings being pulled somewhere
beyond the traditional modes of power.
The litigation costs for the Department of Health went through the Department of Justice. I put in an
Access to Information request and the facts contained here are what they sent me. We know these numbers pertain to
Allard, but
as to the specifics, the documents have been redacted as per Section 23
privacy issues. I guess the bureaucracy didn't want us seeing how
wasteful everyone in government is. Nevertheless
in December 2014, Allard
cost taxpayers $57,436.30. And this is only the beginning. Earlier in
September of 2014, taxpayers had no choice but to see their hard-earned
wealth go to $100,602.90 in government
legal fees. And we can go back further. In July 2014,
Allard cost taxpayers a total of $99,217.19. In May it was
$85,301.79 and this was after the injunction. This was the government
responding to Justice Manson's ruling, not by rewriting the MMPR, but by
fighting patients with their own money.
There
are only two ways to acquire wealth: you earn it or steal it. Some may
say you inherit it, but an inheritance must come from somewhere. Did you
create value in the marketplace and
trade with your brethren through voluntary association? Or did you
acquire wealth by holding a monopoly on all use of legitimate violence?
Perhaps you have discovered a third way of creating value in the
marketplace, but then using the government's monopoly
on violence to prevent competitors from replacing you—much like the LPs
vis-à-vis the original MMAR growers. The Defendant in
Allard is
the federal government. They didn't ask for the funds necessary to go
after non-violent farmers and patients, the federal government gets away
with demanding money from people without providing
a good or service first. In someone's twisted logic, going after
medicinal cannabis gardens may be providing a service for society, but
we're still left with the issue of how they acquired the means to do so.
Without voluntary trade, how can we know that this
service was actually in demand? Chances are, it wasn't.
If Canada were a bit freer, we wouldn't be having this issue. We wouldn't have to worry about how in the lead up to the first
Allard case,
taxpayers involuntarily contributed $247,834.01 to the government's
defense. Or how the more recent 2015 case cost us $464,752.81. By March
2015 the federal government had spent $1,071,501.76
defending their coercive elimination of Canada's original medical
cannabis farms and patient's personal gardens.
Meanwhile
the Cannabis Rights Coalition has raised four times less than that –
literally – and yet they are still winning the fight. The Coalition
didn't have the bottomless pit of the taxpayer;
they relied on voluntary donations. For every dollar raised, the
government raised three more. But in spite of the odds, the Coalition
prevailed because relying on voluntary donations means the money must
used wisely. People must have an incentive to give.
The government doesn't need this kind of
accountability. They take by force and spend as they please. Whatever
they don't collect in taxes they borrow from future generations.
Elections? Look no further than the wise words of H. L. Mencken,
“Every election is a sort of advance auction sale of stolen goods.”
For
now the injunction is still in place. While the federal government
continues to appeal and spend our money doing so, the Coalition is
continually growing and getting ready for any challenge
the prohibitionists throw at them. Meanwhile the government's side of
the case remains funded with taxpayer money. With no risk of a
shortfall, the organizational result is inevitable bureaucracy: wasteful
and ineffective.
*
From the former head of the medical cannabis program in Israel to a top
bureaucrat in the Dutch regime (plus a variety of “experts” from the
United States)
the Crown spent a pretty penny (the details have been redacted) to fly
prominent civil servants, scientists and University professors from all
over the world to Vancouver's federal court building.
any chance of you posting what you received online? very interested in seeing the breakdown
ReplyDeleteSoon, the Globe and Mail are doing a larger piece on it
DeleteI should include a way to identify myself here
ReplyDelete